Friday, April 20, 2012

Trees Destroyed For Heineken/Tribeca Film Festival

Trees Blocking Billboard Chopped
A Heineken/Tribeca Film Festival billboard in SoHo was affixed to the façade of a building at 482 West Broadway at the southwest corner of West Houston Street and West Broadway. A couple of 10-year-old honey locust trees - left and center - were severally damaged when they were illegally pruned. The tree on the right - not blocking the building's facade - escaped the butcher.

Heineken denied the company was behind the tree mutilation, and said it plans to look into "whether or not the third-party installer of the sign has any knowledge of what happened."

According to the Parks Department it is illegal to damage trees on city property, and violations can be punishable by fines as much as $15,000 and a year in prison.

It's been a tough couple of weeks for trees on city property.

Manhattan

Just hours after the news broke that someone had illegally lopped off the tops of a pair of trees that obscured a giant Tribeca Film Festival and Heineken billboard, the beer company offered to replace the mutilated trees, accordng to DNAinfo.


A Heineken representative said the company was in no way behind the "reprehensible" pruning on the southwest corner of West Houston Street and West Broadway but would nonetheless shoulder the burden of replanting.


"We will replace the trees at our expense," a Heineken spokeswoman said Friday morning after DNAinfo broke the story on the trees, adding that the brewery will be advised by the New York Tree Trust, a program of the Parks Department.



Trees Blocking Billboard Chopped


SoHo Trees in Front of Billboard Illegally Cut. The trees would have blocked two out of three lines of text on a four-story billboard advertising Heineken and the Tribeca Film Festival.


"We will rely on the Tree Trust to advise us on the appropriate type and size of tree," she said.


The timing of the replacement of the 10-year-old honey locusts, which locals noticed earlier this month had been chopped, was not yet clear.


A Parks Department spokeswoman said she was unaware of Heineken's offer.


"NYC Parks wants to take this opportunity to remind the public that arborcide is a serious crime," she said. "We urge anyone who may have information leading to the arrest of the perpetrator or perpetrators to report it by calling 311."


It's illegal to damage trees on city property, and violations can be punishable by fines as much as $15,000 and a year in prison, according to the Parks department website.


Heineken will continue to look into whether a third-party installer of the four-story ad attached to the side of a building has any knowledge of what happened, the company spokeswoman said.


"In no way was this action sanctioned by us," she said. "We had nothing to do with it and we find it to be reprehensible."

Tribeca Film Festival previously said it had no knowledge of work performed on the trees, and billboard owner Fuel Outdoor did not respond to multiple calls for comment.


TriBeCa resident and certified citizen tree pruner Steve Boyce, 60, said he appreciated the replacement of the trees on high-traffic West Houston Street.


"It's definitely a gesture, and it's greatly appreciated," he said.


Boyce suggested the city pursue a long-term solution to conflicts with the owners of billboards in high-traffic areas. "This is a cat-and-mouse game," he said. "The city and billboard owners could either make sure trees [in front of billboards] are trimmed or that there are just no trees there."


Read More:

DNAinfo - April 20, 2012 - By Andrea Swalec

DNAinfo - April 20, 2012 - By Andrea Swalec

WPIX - April 20, 2012 - By Greg Mocker

3 comments:

  1. that's awful, if that terrible tree topping was sanctioned by heineken, they should be sued by the city. it looks terrible, its bad for the environement and they just destroyed perfectly nice trees, way to go all for some corporate branding..

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  2. As stated- It's illegal to damage trees on city property, and violations can be punishable by fines as much as $15,000 and a year in prison, according to the Parks department website.

    If the owner is issued a summons and reports to an ECB hearing, if there is no one testifying against the owner as having observed his perpetration of the misdeed then the Admin Law Judge will dismiss the case. There's gotta be a witness. DPR looses hundreds of cases on summonses issued for tree damages with no witnesses to testify. So why bother summonsing and having to pay a public employee overtime to sit in court for a highly probable loosing outcome.

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  3. Why not go after Bobby DeNiro....
    I mean he's behind everything that goes on in Tribeca....
    He dosen't care about OUR neighborhood....

    ReplyDelete